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2011 Annual Merit Review Proceedings

Hydrogen Storage

These presentations and posters from the Hydrogen Storage session at the Annual Merit Review in May 2011, are available as Adobe Acrobat PDFs.

Overview of Hydrogen Storage, Ned Stetson, DOE

Storage Presentations

  1. Storage Testing, Safety, and Analysis
  2. HSECoE
  3. Metal Hydride
  4. Sorption
  5. Chemical Hydrogen
  6. Tanks
  7. Test/Analysis

A. Storage Testing, Safety, and Analysis

  1. System Level Analysis of Hydrogen Storage Options, Rajesh Ahluwalia, ANL
  2. Cost Analyses of Hydrogen Storage Materials and On-Board Systems, Karen Law, TIAX, LLC

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B. HSECoE

  1. Hydrogen Storage Engineering Center of Excellence, Don Anton, SRNL
  2. System Design, Analysis, Modeling, and Media Engineering Properties for Hydrogen Energy Storage, Matthew Thornton, NREL
  3. Chemical Hydride Rate Modeling, Validation, and System Demonstration, Troy Semelsberger, LANL
  4. Key Technologies, Thermal Management, and Prototype Testing for Advanced Solid-State Hydrogen Storage Systems, Joseph Reiter, NASA JPL
  5. SRNL Technical Work Scope for the Hydrogen Storage Engineering Center of Excellence: Design and Testing of Metal Hydride and Adsorbent Systems, Ted Motyka, SRNL
  6. Systems Engineering of Chemical Hydride, Pressure Vessel, and Balance of Plant for On-Board Hydrogen Storage, Jamie Holladay, PNNL
  7. Advancement of Systems Designs and Key Engineering Technologies for Materials Based Hydrogen Storage, Bart van Hassel, UTRC
  8. Optimization of Heat Exchangers and System Simulation of On-Board Storage Systems Designs, Darsh Kumar, General Motors
  9. Ford/BASF-SE/UM Activities in Support of the Hydrogen Storage Engineering Center of Excellence, Andrea Sudik, Ford Motor
  10. Microscale Enhancement of Heat and Mass Transfer for Hydrogen Energy Storage, Kevin Drost, Oregon State University
  11. Development of Improved Composite Pressure Vessels for Hydrogen Storage, Norman Newhouse, Lincoln Composites

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C. Metal Hydride

  1. Design of Novel Multi-Component Metal Hydride-Based Mixtures for Hydrogen Storage, Christopher Wolverton, Northwestern University
  2. Advanced, High-Capacity Reversible Metal Hydrides, Craig Jensen, University of Hawaii
  3. Lightweight Metal Hydrides for Hydrogen Storage, J.-C. Zhao, Ohio State University
  4. Reversible Hydrogen Storage Materials - Structure, Chemistry, and Electronic Structure, Ian Robertson, University of Illinois
  5. Aluminum Hydride, Jason Graetz, BNL
  6. Electrochemical Reversible Formation of Alane, Ragaiy Zidan, SRNL

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D. Sorption

  1. A Biomimetic Approach to Metal-Organic Frameworks with High H2 Uptake, Joe Zhou, Texas A&M University
  2. A Joint Theory and Experimental Project in the Synthesis and Testing of Porous COFs/ZIFs for On-Board Vehicular Hydrogen Storage, Omar Yaghi, UCLA
  3. Multiply Surface-Functionalized Nanoporous Carbon for Vehicular Hydrogen Storage, Peter Pfeifer, University of Missouri
  4. New Carbon-Based Porous Materials with Increased Heats of Adsorption for Hydrogen Storage, Randy Snurr, Northwestern University
  5. Hydrogen Storage through Nanostructured Porous Organic Polymers (POPs), D.J. Liu, ANL
  6. Hydrogen Trapping through Designer Hydrogen Spillover Molecules with Reversible Temperature and Pressure-Induced Switching, Angela Lueking, Penn State University
  7. Weak Chemisorption Validation, Thomas Gennett, NREL

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E. Chemical Hydrogen

  1. Hydrogen Storage by Novel CBN Heterocycle Materials, Shih-Yuan Liu, University of Oregon
  2. Liquid Hydrogen Storage Materials, Anthony Burrell, LANL

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F. Tanks

  1. Melt Processable PAN Precursor for High Strength, Low-Cost Carbon Fibers, Felix Paulauskas, ORNL

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G. Test/Analysis

  1. Analysis of H2 Storage Needs for Early Market Non-motive Fuel Cell Applications, Lennie Klebanoff, SNL
  2. Analysis of Storage Needs for Early Motive Fuel Cell Markets, Jennifer Kurtz, NREL

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Storage Posters

  1. Storage Testing, Safety, and Analysis
  2. Sorbent
  3. Metal Hydride
  4. Tanks
  5. Test/Analysis
  6. X-cut
  7. SBIR Phase I Project

A. Storage Testing, Safety, and Analysis

  1. Quantifying and Addressing the DOE Material Reactivity Requirements with Analysis and Testing of Hydrogen Storage Materials and Systems, John Khalil, UTRC
  2. Composite Materials for Hazard Mitigation of Reactive Metal Hydrides, Joseph Pratt, SNL
  3. Best Practices for Characterizing Engineering Properties of Hydrogen Storage Materials, Karl Gross, H2 Technology Consulting LLC

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B. Sorbent

  1. Polymer-Based Activated Carbon Nanostructures for H2 Storage, Israel Cabasso, State University of New York
  2. Hydrogen Storage in Metal-Organic Frameworks, Omar Yaghi, UCLA

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C. Metal Hydride

  1. Tunable Thermodynamics and Kinetics for Hydrogen Storage: Nanoparticle Synthesis Using Ordered Polymer Templates, Mark Allendorf, SNL
  2. Hydrogen Storage Materials for Fuel Cell Powered Vehicles, Andrew Goudy, Delaware State University
  3. Neutron Characterization in Support of the DOE Hydrogen Storage Program, Terry Udovic, NIST
  4. Amide and Combined Amide/Borohydride Investigations, Don Anton, SRNL

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D. Tanks

  1. Lifecycle Verification of Polymeric Storage Liners, Barton Smith, ORNL
  2. Development of Low-Cost, High Strength Commercial Textile Precursor (PAN-MA), Dave Warren, ORNL

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E. Test/Analysis

  1. Standardized Testing Program for Solid-State Hydrogen Storage Technologies, Michael Miller, Southwest Research Instititue

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F. X-cut

  1. Purdue Hydrogen Systems Laboratory, Jay Gore, Purdue University
  2. HGMS: Glasses and Nanocomposites for Hydrogen Storage, Kristina Lipinska-Kalita, University of Nevada Las Vegas

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G. SBIR Phase I Project

  1. Low Cost, Metal Hydride Hydrogen Storage System for Forklift Applications, Craig Jensen, University of Hawaii

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To locate posters and presentations from other meeting sessions, go to the main page of the 2011 Annual Merit Review Proceedings.